Posts Tagged ‘views’
August 26, 2009
After seeing friends’ photos from an overnight trip up Sahale Arm via Cascade Pass several years ago—even before we began hiking seriously—the trip has sat almost constantly atop our queue, waiting for the perfect window of time and weather to savor the experience.
This wouldn’t be that.

South and west from near Cascade Pass.
But it wasn’t half-bad, either.
After reading that the Cascade River Road would close September 1st and remain closed through much of October, I set aside the hope that this would be the year that we’d backpack up Sahale Arm and spend the night under starry skies and, instead, settled for a dayhike up to Cascade Pass, or perhaps a bit beyond. If all I’d read was to be believed—i.e., that I’d run out of superlatives before reaching the pass—we’d be returning for that idealized evening on the Arm, anyway.
Knowing that the trail would be busy no matter what the time, and doing our best to get all of six hours of sleep after watching Inglourious Basterds the night before, we left West Seattle at 06:20. After stopping in Marblemount in a thwarted attempt at a warm breakfast sandwich, we headed up the 23-mile Cascade River Road stuffing a quarter-pound of Costco muffin into each of our mouths. Signs along the way warn that the road is primitive, but it’s actually an excellent road, with glimpses up and across the valley all along the way. At 09:10, just less than three hours after leaving home, we pulled into a large, mostly-full parking lot. I’d expected views at the parking lot, but I was impressed nevertheless by the dominating face of Johannesburg Mountain, even as seen through our cracked windshield. Its upper reaches were shrouded in clouds.

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Posted in 2009, Trip Reports, day hike | Tagged 2009, 2500'+ gain, 6000'+, August, Cascade Pass, Cascade Peak, Cascade River, Cascade River Road, day hike, Doubtful Lake, Eldorado Peak, Hidden Lake Peaks, hiking, Johannesburg Mountain, marmots, Mix-up Peak, north cascades, North Cascades National Park, Sahale Arm, Sahale Peak, Stehekin River, trip report, views, WA-20, Washington State | 2 Comments »
July 20, 2009
After “losing” the first weekend in July to my grandmother’s 80th birthday party and the second to a Saturday spent soaking at Breitenbush Hot Springs, we were well overdue for a hike. Sunday was the only day available to us, so we settled on a dayhike at Mt. Rainier National Park. I’d seen some stunning photographs taken from the Burroughs trail near Sunrise, and yearned for some in-your-face views of The Mountain—on prior trips to Mt. Rainier National Park (Spray Park, Summerland) the eponymous mountain remained frustratingly hidden in cloudcover. If the weather forecast was to be believed, this day would be different. It was.

Mt. Rainier and wildflowers from just above Sunrise.
On top of our hike starting at the always-busy Sunrise Visitor Center, we learned during the week that it was Get Into Your National Park Free Day, or some such thing. So I set my alarm early, had no trouble getting Nicole out of bed, and we were on the road at 04:40. I love early starts, but even as we cruised through Enumclaw and the tip of The Mountain lit up, I wished we’d started even earlier. At 06:40, just two hours later, we pulled into Sunrise with our pick of the parking lot. Ten minutes later, we were on wide empty trails through lupine with outstanding views of Mt. Rainier. Of course, the views of Mt. Rainier are outstanding from the parking lot.

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Posted in 2009, Trip Reports, day hike | Tagged 2000'+ gain, 2009, 7500'+, Burroughs, Burroughs Mountain, day hike, hiking, July, marmots, Mount Rainier National Park, mountain goats, Mt. Rainier, Sunrise, trip report, views, views: Glacier Peak, views: Mt Rainier, views: Mt Stuart, views: Mt. Baker, Washington State | Leave a Comment »
June 29, 2009
Somehow, Nicole and I had yet to truly reach a summit. It’s probably because we’d never picked a hike with the summit of a mountain as our destination. On Mt. Aix, we came close, only to be turned back by fear and thunderclouds. At Marmot Pass earlier this year, summiting Buckhorn Mtn. had been a thought until full backpacks and bum knees made us think otherwise. So reaching a summit was overdue, and Nicole in particular really wanted to accomplish that goal.

Mt. Stuart and The Enchantments Range from Navaho Peak.
Cousin Bobby, who accompanied us on our hike to Goat Lake two weekends ago and didn’t break a sweat the entire time, wanted to go out again. We wanted to take him somewhere impressive, as we only have a few more free weekends until his internship ends. We also wanted to make him sweat.
Our friend David, who just returned from teaching English in Mexico for ~1.75 years and is staying with us at the moment, insisted that he had boundless energy and didn’t want to be left behind. He may have been exaggerating, and he might be regretting his decision at this very moment.
Our destination was chosen earlier in the week: Navaho Peak, in the Teanaway area. Like last week, we were unpleasantly surprised to find that Navaho Pass was declared WTA’s Hike of the Week. Undeterred by this obvious and repetitive display of telepathic plagiarism, we kept the plans in place as they were.

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Posted in 2009, Trip Reports, day hike | Tagged 2009, 4000'+ gain, 7000'+, Alpine Lakes Wilderness, day hike, hiking, I-90, June, Navaho Pass, Navaho Peak, Stafford Creek, summit, Teanaway, trail #1359, trip report, views, views: Mt Adams, views: Mt Rainier, views: Mt Stuart, w/ friends, Washington State, Wenatchee National Forest | 4 Comments »
June 8, 2009
I’d had my eye turned toward the Olympic Peninsula for several weeks. Our only hike on the other side of the Sound was a beach backpack, so we hadn’t really experienced the Olympic Mountains. And, after years of admiring them from afar, it was well past time to do something about it.

Falls in the Big Quilcene River.
Last month, I’d decided that we’d hike the Upper Big Quilcene Trail #833.1 sometime soon. The Forest Service conditions report on 05/18/09 said the trailhead was open and that there was heavy snow around 5000′. With Marmot Pass another 1000′ above that, I decided to wait it out a bit. Several weeks passed, temperatures soared into the 90s—then retreated, and I forgot all about the knee pain from two weeks prior.
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Posted in 2009, Trip Reports, backpack | Tagged 1-night, 1-night backpack, 2009, 3500'+ gain, 6000'+, backpacking, Big Quilcene, Big Quilcene River, Buckhorn Wilderness, hiking, June, Marmot Pass, Olympic Mountains, Olympic National Forest, trail #833.1, trip report, views, views: Olympic Mountains, WA-101, Washington State, waterfalls | 4 Comments »
May 27, 2009
This Memorial Day Weekend marked our one-year backpacking anniversary. Last year, we spent two nights on the Olympic coast. This year, while we were tempted to try something similar, a quick filter of our newly created and creatively named “Hikes We Want To Do” spreadsheet sent the Thunder Creek trail in North Cascades National Park to the top of our list. Early season accessibility and the meager elevation gain and distance conducive to a first-of-the-season backpack will tend to do that. I penciled it in my calendar several weeks ago, and there it stayed.

Tricouni Peak as viewed from Junction Camp.
We left the house at 05:20, after oversleeping fifteen minutes and scrambling some eggs. Since we’d be spending the night–two, actually–within the National Park, we had to stop at the ranger station in Marblemount to pick up our permits. At 07:15 we pulled up to the ranger station and got in line behind the several parties that had arrived before us. (The ranger station opened at 07:00.) Their destinations were varied, but there was a common answer to one of the ranger’s questions: Subaru. The repetition became quite comical by the end of the line. We were the end of the line.
I’d read somewhere on NWHikers that Tricouni Camp was nice, and when the ranger said there were only two sites at that camp, I was sold. It also helped that the camp is ~7.7 miles in (according to Green Trails Map #48) and just before the most significant elevation gain of the entire trail. The ranger warned us of pesky deer, issued our permit, and we were back on the road.
At 08:10, we pulled into the trailhead at the south end of Colonial Creek Campground and hit the trail fifteen minutes later. Last year, we spent the night at the campground and went for an ill-fated day hike up to Fourth of July Pass. The first ~1.5 miles of that hike and this backpack are both along the Thunder Creek trail, so we had an idea what to expect, and I won’t elaborate on what I’ve basically written before.
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Posted in 2009, Trip Reports, backpack | Tagged 2-nights, 2000'+ gain, 2009, backpack, backpacking, bear, black bear, Colonial Creek Campground, hiking, May, North Cascades National Park, Ross Lake National Recreation Area, Thunder Creek, Thunder Creek trail, Tricouni Camp, Tricouni Peak, trip report, views, views: Tricouni Peak, WA-20, Washington State | Leave a Comment »